Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Honeywell to make flying safer by decoding accents in India

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: With more than 100 languages and the ambition to connect even its smallest villages by air, India has become a testing ground for a new software being developed by Honeywell Internatio­nal Inc. that aims to make it easier to understand pilots speaking English with strong local accents.

The conglomera­te is, at the behest of the government, developing software that will decipher accents and automatica­lly transcribe what’s said for air traffic controller­s. The move will enhance safety at a time when Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s push to add smaller airports to the world’s fastest-growing major market has increased the demand for pilots who could be speaking in a thick accent, thanks to more than 6,000-old dialects spoken across the country.

“One of the biggest problems in India has been that we Indians don’t understand each other’s English because of the dialects,” Neelu Khatri, president of Honeywell’s aerospace business in the South Asian nation, said in an interview in New Delhi. “This, we thought, works very well for the regional connectivi­ty scheme, because you have regional pilots coming in, people don’t know what he said and what he understood.”

Miscommuni­cation between air traffic controller­s and pilots is a safety threat globally.

A fatal 1996 crash between a Saudi Boeing 747 and the Kazakh Ilyushin-76 near New Delhi, which killed 349, was primarily blamed on a language barrier, involving pilots whose first language wasn’t English.

While the project is first being implemente­d in India, Honeywell sees scope to expand the offering to other parts of the world, Khatri said, without giving further details.

The company’s engineerin­g prowess in India allows it to customize products that cater to local needs, rather than push solutions from its global portfolio.

“It’s a real time problem and therefore these kind of problems don’t have ready made solutions,” she said. “We just try to put our people who can understand the problem and then try to create something.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Miscommuni­cation between air traffic controller­s and pilots is a safety threat globally.
BLOOMBERG Miscommuni­cation between air traffic controller­s and pilots is a safety threat globally.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India